Depth and Discovery: Powering Visualizations with the Google Analytics API
We’re always really excited to see what developers are building with Google Analytics. Here’s an amazing visualization using the API from our friends at . Now, this is what we’re talking about when we say this stuff is “Off the charts!” (The API team t-shirt slogan).
At Juice, we work with web analytics APIs large and small, from Google, comScore and Omniture. The Google Analytics API is our favorite. It powers the world’s best, most widely deployed analytics site. And it powers Juice products like (innovative search analytics) and (a tool for exploring the Google Analytics API).
We were approached by the Google Analytics API team to explore new ways of looking at data with the API, and we were excited by the possibilities. We’ve been working on our own visualization framework, , that integrates the power of the with .
The result is , two visualizations powered by the that are free to use. You just need a Google account with access to Google Analytics data to explore your own data. Here are the details about the visualizations, called Referrer Flow and Keyword Tree.
Referrer Flow
Curious about what sites are linking to you and what content is benefitting the most? The Referrer Flow visualization answers those question and shows how results change over time. It’s a stream of daily treemaps showing pageviews and bounce rates for various groupings of your website’s pages. You can group by combinations of page title, referrer and url.
Here is a brief video introduction:
Clicking on the treemap will filter all the data by the page, referrer or url that you clicked on. Click again to clear your filter.
Keyword Tree
A list of top keywords isn’t enough to really understand how people are searching and finding your site. The Keyword Tree visualization displays the most frequently used search keywords and how they are used together. Here’s a video overview:
You’ll see a frequently used search term at the center and the words and phrases that are most often used in combination with that word. Pick a different starting word by typing into the box in the upper right or selecting from the top word across the bottom of the screen. The words are sized by their frequency of use and colored by bounce rate (or % new visitors or average time on site). Roll over a word to see details about that combination of connected words.
Depth and Discovery
In designing these visualizations we focused on the question: how can we let users uncover the unexpected? That means designing targeted visualizations focused on limited well-defined issues. The Referrer Flow monomaniacally focuses on a single question “What pages are people viewing on your site and where are they coming from?” The Keyword Tree is laser-focused on word ordering and what that means for keyword performance.
The Google Analytics reporting tool is a great general-purpose reporting solution. It gives the advanced users everything they need to answer specific questions. However, its generality means it has limited ability to focus on two issues; depth and discovery.
The Google Analytics API is Google’s solution to this problem. It’s an opportunity both for businesses like ours that can create new ways of analyzing data, and for large sites that can use the API for integration, custom analytics, and more.
Thanks, Juice! We continue to be impressed by the new solutions developers are bringing to market by leveraging the Google Analytics Platform. If you have developed a useful new tool or integration on top of Google Analytics, drop us an email at analytics-api@google.com. If it’s innovative and useful we’ll highlight it to our readers on this blog.
Posted by Nick Mihailovski, Google Analytics API Team
This entry was posted by news on 19/11/2009 at 17:00, and is filled under Analytics. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site.
With all this talk about Google TV, Apple TV, and other set-top boxes, it’s easy to forget about the venerable home theater PC. While the interface will be less intuitive than those other, flashier solutions (nobody likes navigating Windows or another desktop OS from the couch), the capabilities are endless and upgrading is straightforward. This new one is also as sleek and compact as a normal DVD player.
This is a live blog post by guest blogger, Imelda Khoo. Imelda is the E-Marketing Manager at Tektronix, responsible for global SEO, PPC and social media. Imelda blogs at SEM Booty and is also on Twitter @imeldak
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originally appeared on on Fri, 21 May 2010 20:41:00 EDT. Please see our .
pimg src=”http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3635/4557352055_ebe25952e0_o.jpg” alt=”" align=”RIGHT” /Imagine a single search request coursing through Google’s massive infrastructure. A single request can run across thousands of machines and involve hundreds of different subsystems. And oh by the way, you are processing more requests per second than any other system in the world. How do you debug such a system? How do you figure out where the problems are? How do you determine if programmers are coding correctly? How do you keep sensitive data secret and safe? How do ensure products don’t use more resources than they are assigned? How do you store all the data? How do you make use of it?/p
pThat’s where Dapper comes in. Dapper is Google’s tracing system and it was originally created to understand the system behaviour from a search request. Now Google’s production clusters stronggenerate more than 1 terabyte of sampled trace data per day/strong. So how does Dapper do what Dapper does?/p
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There is much excited talk right now about Eric Schmidt letting slip that Google is indeed working on a tablet. Yeah, I think we all knew that. The only real surprise is that it’s running Android, possibly with Chrome tacked on as the browser. Why not ChromeOS? I suppose Google thinks it would be pretty ridiculous to debut a new OS with a new device, with only web apps available, when the competition will have a million-seller with 180,000 apps already available. Android is the only arrow in their quiver that can strike at iPhone right now. In fact, Google Chrome OS as a separate entity might be a smokescreen.